The
following titles are available for
library use only in the Art History/Classics Library (AH/C), Environmental Design Library (ENVI), and Newspapers
&
Microforms (News/Micro). Reader-printers are available in Newpapers
and Microforms, 40 Doe and the Environmental Design Library, 210
Wurster Hall.

The
collection is arranged alphabetically by geographic area or by the name of the
site, including views of the sites, architecture, sculpture, and painting. It
contains photographs of the art of ancient Gandhara and Bactria, from the
territories of Afghanistan (sites: Bamiyan; Begram; Fauladi; Fondukistan;
Hadda; Kakrak; Khair-Khaneh; Paitava; Shotorak; and Surkh-Kotal), Pakistan
(sites: Jamalghari; Loriyan Tangai; Mardan; Muhammad Nuri; Peshawar; Sari
Bahlol; Sikri; Swat; Takht-i-Bahi; Taxila; Dharmarajika; Jandial; Jaulian;
Mohra Moradu; and Sirkap), and India.

Contains
three photograph collections from the Alinari Photo Archive: the Alinari
Collection (66,444 photos); the Anderson Collection (27,244 photos); and the
Brogi Collection (25,382 photos). The Alinari collection includes photographs
from all of the regions of Italy as well as from some
museums abroad such as the Louvre and the DresdenMuseum.The Brogi Collection covers the whole of Italy but concentrates on Florence and Tuscany, while the Anderson collection centers on Rome.These collections are kept separately and
must be searched individually.The
photographs are classified topographically.The finding aids do not cover the whole collection, but detailed lists
of the Alinari, Brogi, and Anderson collections are published on
microfiche.Subject
and name indices for the Alinari collection only.The printed guide provides a finding aid for
Italian cities and villages and their provinces.

America, 1935-1946: the
photographs of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Security
Administration, and the U.S. Office of War Information, arranged by region and
by subject.
Cambridge, England: Chadwyck-Healey, Ltd.; Teaneck, N.J.: Somerset House, 1980.

1,637 microfiches + index.

News/Micro,
MICROFICHE 28570 (For GUIDE see: MICROFICHE 28570.guide)
Microfiche shelved alphabetically by region: Farwest, General USA/Canada and
North America/Puerto Rico & Virgin Islands, Midwest, Northwest, Northeast,
South, Southwest.87,677 selected
photographs reproduced from the collections of the Library of Congress Prints
and Photographs Division. The most famous are from the Farm Security
Administration project in the mid-1930s, representing some of the earliest and
best examples of the use of photography as social documentation. Includes work
by Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, Russell Lee, Marion Post Wolcott and Arthur
Rothstein.

There
are over 4,000 American (U.S.) artists in the Witt Library and about 70,000
photographs or reproductions of paintings, drawings and engravings by
them.The holdings of the Witt in this
area complement well-known American archives such as the Frick Art Reference
Library.The American section covers the
period from the early 18th century up to 1980; its coverage of 20th century art
is as strong as the earlier
periods.The accompanying guide contains
an alphabetical listing providing artists' names, dates and places of birth and
death (when known) plus the number of the first fiche where the artists' mounts
have been recorded to microfiche.The
first column of numbers refers to the original 1981 microfiche edition, the second column refers to American artists: microfiche from the Witt Library, Courtauld Institute
of Art, 10 year update 1981-1991 (see the next entry, below).

News/Micro,
MICROFILM 3439.NDBulletin Rubens was originally
published from 1882-1900, in 5 volumes, by P. Génard
and C. Ruelens. A primary source for archival
documents on Rubens and his family, specifically
created to illuminate Ruben's life as artist, scholar, diplomat, school
headmaster, family man and citizen. Includes documentation on
Ruben's art, correspondence, historical studies, unedited documents, political
activities, etc.In French, with illustrations.

A
collection of 120 French-language manuscripts, mainly acquired between 1798 and
1840. Extensive

codicological descriptions are given for the majority of manuscripts; those not
described are included for a

complete overview. As a supplement, manuscript provenance is included.
Highlights of the collection are the Heures de la Passion by Christine de
Pisan, Cité de Dieu by Saint Augustine, and the collection of the
princes of Orange-Nassau.

Covering
catalogues from the BritishMuseum collection, each catalogue
is preceded by a contents card detailing the names of the owners, date of sale,
number of pages, lots, illustrations, location of the copy filmed, and the
contents of the sale. To facilitate use, the entries in the guides for each
part are arranged in the same chronological order as the catalogues in the
microfilm collection.Contents are
categorized under the following headings: Autographed Letters, Art (Objects),
Art (Pictorial), Books, Coins and Medals, Mss.(Western), Mss.
(Oriental), and Other.

Cicognara Library: literary
sources in the history of art and kindred subjects. Edited
by PhilippFehl and Lizabeth Wilson.Urbana, Ill.:Published by the LeopoldoCicognara Program at the University of Illinois Library in association with
the Vatican Library, 1989-.

ENVI, MICROFICHE 35834

The
Cicognara Library Collection contains approximately
five thousand books on art, archaeology, and allied subjects. Acquired by the Vatican from Conte LeopoldoCicognara (1767-1834) in
1824, the books datefrom the beginning of
printing to Cicognara's time. Included are many bound
volumes of engravings with texts that show how to draw and paint, how
perspective works, how to build houses, bridges, fountains, machines, etc. In
addition, there is a large collection of books
and pamphlets on museums and private collections, sales catalogs, travel to
historic and artistic sites, engravings of works of art and architecture,
feasts, funerary rites and solemn entries, costume and dress, emblems,
hieroglyphs, andmore.

Microform of the 63 volume Deloynes collection in the Bibliothèque nationale.A panorama
of art criticism during the Old Regime, The Revolution and the Empire, this
collection includes over 2000 pamphlets, manuscripts, and salon and exhibition
catalogs. The Deloynes Collection was begun by the well-known merchant and
amateur artist Pierre-Jean Mariette, who was succeeded in 1774 by Charles-NicolasCochin.At Cochin's death in 1790, the work
was continued by M. Deloynes, auditor at the Cour des Comptes.Each salon catalog contains critiques,
lampoons and appreciations. The volumes are organized chronologically; however,
the last volumes of the collection are arranged thematically.

Reproduces the card index file to articles on the fine arts,
architecture, decorative arts and related subjects, which appeared in almost
200 art periodicals over a forty year period beginning in the mid 1930s.Subject headings serve to guide the users,
i.e. iconography, portraits, sculpture, etc.Most cards include a brief summary of the article referred to, and each
subject is indexed in fine detail.Each
header strip includes details of the first and last subjects of the fiche.

Crace Collection of London
views in the British Museum. BritishMuseum,
Department of Prints and Drawings.London: Mindata, 1982.8 microfilm reels + guide

News/Micro,
MICROFILM 20520see DA677.A12.C7 (MICROFILM GUIDES) for index
to reels and catalog of the collection.

A comprehensive graphical representation of London from the
16th to the 19th centuries, comprising almost 8,000 reproductions.

News/Micro,
MICROFICHE 30529 (Guide MICROFICHE 30529.guide)This microfiche collection is the second, enlarged edition of the
reproduction of the card catalog of the Freer Gallery of Art Library,
Smithsonian. Half of the book collection is in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean,
and also includes numerous manuscripts, photographs, and slides. The guide
provides an introduction and a list of fiche headers arranged by sections:Asian language catalog,Western language catalog, Library of Congress classification catalog.

This
collection reproduces photographs, mainly taken before the end of the 19th
century, in the collection of the Victoria and AlbertMuseum, London, and represents only a
small portion of the Alinari archive. Photographs are arranged topographically,
in alphabetical order by town, and organized mainly in three sections: Town
A-Z; Florence; and Rome. The guide features two
separate alphabetical indexes: artists, architects, and sculptors; and
churches, museums and important buildings.

Selected glass negatives
(some positive) made mainly in Egypt, some in Greece and Turkey, showing
Islamic and modern architecture, ancient Egyptian monuments, daily life in the
cities and countryside and flora and fauna of Egypt.Original photographer unknown, but many of
the negatives have exact dates. Includes printed guide.

Emblem
books are an invaluable source for historians of literature and the visual
arts.This collection includes rare and
important emblem books starting with the first published emblem book, Alciato's
Emblematum Liber (1531).Other authors
in this collection include Abraham a Sancta Clar, Camerarius, Drechsel,
Menestrier, and Ripa.

Exhibition catalogs of the
Hermitage from the Library of the State Hermitage Museum St. Petersburg. New York: Norman Ross Publishing,
2000.

News/Micro,
MICROFICHE 28597

The
catalog collection traces in chronological order the Hermitage exhibition history
and covers the period immediately following the Revolution through the
1970s.The catalogs comprehend the
outstanding permanent collections of the Hermitage, covering areas such as
primitive culture, the culture and art of ancient Egypt, Russian culture, the
art of Italy, England and France, decorative silver, European wallpaper, etc.
Also includes guides and catalogs
covering collections on loan from other institutions that were temporarily
exhibited at the Hermitage. These catalogs comprise a large part of this
microfiche collection and include a great variety of subjects.

News/Micro, MICROFICHE 1785See N7420.A12.I6 (News/Micro) for a guide to the microform edition.

Consists of more than 60,000 alphabetically filed entries.These entries contain, in addition to
photographic reproductions of art works, much literary, bibliographic, and
historical information. Although the bulk of the material comes from the 16th
and 17th centuries, entries are included from as early as A. D. 1250 to as
recently as 1940.The guide is also
issued on microfiche, together with the microform edition, filed at head of the
set.

Bibliographies
on architecture, painting, graphic art, sculpture and landscape gardening
published between 1500 and 1850. Covers Germany, Austria, Switzerland, England, France, Italy, Spain and the
U.S.A. Arranged alphabetically by the compiler's name. Guide contains index of
authors and titles plus an index of titles arranged by country and art genre.

A collection of 35 handwritten texts, typewritten texts, notebooks, and
clippings from Kazimer Severinovich Malevich (1878-1935).The texts date from 1913 to 1927 and include
the complete manuscript for the proposed 1922 edition of the book
"Suprematism. Mir kak bespredmetnost."The archive also contains parts of Malevich'
main philosophical work "The World as Non-Objectivity."

The authentic collection of
all Escher drawings housed in the HaagsGemeentemuseum. Includes aprinted guide listing the individual drawings
with specifications as to date, exact size, technique used and place in the
microfiche collection.Approximately 2,100 drawings.

The
930,000 photographs cover material from the Middle
Ages to the present.The western and
non-western art included covers architecture, painting, sculpture, prints, and
decorative arts and crafts.Organized
topographically, it begins with municipal architecture, followed by sacred and
secular architecture, and ends with museums and their individual works of
art.Within the frame of each microfiche
are names of artists, titles of works, dates, and dimensions.Provides extensive subject
index.The Marburger Index is
based on ICONCLASS : an iconographic classification system (AH/C,
Room 308J - Microfiche Cabinet, Z697.A8.W3 1973), a subject specific
international classification system for iconographic research and the
documentation of images covering the subjects of western art.Provides definitions,
including keywords, of objects, persons, events, situations and abstract ideas
that can be the subject of an image.

These
22 manuscripts (some in color) date from the 9th to the 15th centuries. The
collection includes a 12th-century Gregorii Homiliae, the Lambeth Bible, the
Lambeth Apocalypse, St. Alban's Chronicle, St. Neot's Psalter and the
9th-century Gospels of MacDurnan.For
contents list to reels, see MICROFILM 17738 BX guide (in News/Micro).

AH/C,
Room 308J - Microfiche Cabinet, MICROFICHE 6022 A sample
survey of modern Chinese art limited to the first three decades of the People's
Republic of China. The survey is based on Dutch, British, and German library
collections. Here pictorial art is defined by traditional Chinese painting, oil
painting, water-color, and drawings & graphics (distinguished as woodcuts, nianhua, posters and prints). The name of the artist, title
of painting (in Chinese if the original title was available; otherwise, in
English), date, place of publication and subject are provided. Searchable by alphabetical,
chronological, and subject indexes.

Contains announcements, newspaper clippings, press releases, reviews, and
other ephemera from the late 19th through the mid-20th centuries relating to
more than 20,000 modern artists.Arranged
alphabetically by artist's name and includes material on all kinds of artists
from painters to performers. Includes bibliographical references.

Photographs, made between
1931 and 1975 by Egyptologist Hans Wolfgang Müller. Photos document objects d'art, sculptures, reliefs and smaller objects as well as other Egyptian
antiquities. Over 9,000
photographs.Includes
printed guide with list of places, sites and collections in alphabetical order;
list of fiches and their contents; and list of objects and negative numbers.

Collection of images--engravings,
caricatures, photographs, reproductions of paintings--that have as their
subject French artists and ateliers from the 15th to the 20th centuries, in the
BibliothèqueNationale de
France, Estampes et Photographies
Department.

The
Municipal Archives of Rotterdam holds a remarkable collection of large-format
posters documenting theatre and some opera performances in the city's theatres
and in certain other Dutch cities in the second half of the 19th and first
quarter of the 20th centuries.Provides a significant resource for research for the history of the
theatre and performance but also for the wider study of European culture during
this crucial period of its history.

As
writer, art theorist and art critic, van Doesburg was an untiring propagandist
of the new.This archive contains
correspondence with artists and magazine editors; Van Doesburg's published
works and many manuscripts; photos of his work and the exhibitions he took part
in; scrapbooks, notebooks, diaries and personal papers.